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J Neurophysiol 91: 1748-1762, 2004. First published November 26, 2003; doi:10.1152/jn.00957.2003
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Neuronal Activity in Motor Cortical Areas Reflects the Sequential Context of Movement

Yoram Ben-Shaul, Rotem Drori, Itay Asher, Eran Stark, Zoltan Nadasdy and Moshe Abeles

Department of Physiology and the Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation and the Hebrew University–Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem 91120, Israel

Submitted 3 October 2003; accepted in final form 16 November 2003

Natural actions can be described as chains of simple elements, whereas individual motion elements are readily concatenated to generate countless movement sequences. Sequence-specific neurons have been described extensively, suggesting that the motor system may implement temporally complex motions by using such neurons to recruit lower-level movement neurons modularly. Here, we set out to investigate whether activity of movement-related neurons is independent of the sequential context of the motion. Two monkeys were trained to perform linear arm movements either individually or as components of double-segment motions. However, comparison of neuronal activity between these conditions is delicate because subtle kinematic variations generally occur within different contexts. We therefore used extensive procedures to identify the contribution of variations in motor execution to differences in neuronal activity. Yet, even after application of these procedures we find that neuronal activity in the motor cortex (PMd and M1) associated with a given motion segment differs between the two contexts. These differences appear during preparation and become even more prominent during motion execution. Interestingly, despite context-related differences on the single-neuron level, the population as a whole still allows a reliable readout of movement direction regardless of the sequential context. Thus the direction of a movement and the sequential context in which it is embedded may be simultaneously and reliably encoded by neurons in the motor cortex.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Y. Ben-Shaul, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University–Hadassah Medical School, P.O. Box 12272, Jerusalem 91120, Israel (E-mail: ybss{at}md2.huji.ac.il).




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